Nappy Sack 0 - Dog ...
 

[Closed] Nappy Sack 0 - Dog Poo 1

52 Posts
25 Users
0 Reactions
180 Views
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Can anyone recommend a brand of finger bleach? 😯


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 4:57 pm
Posts: 30656
Free Member
 

Just cut them off.


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 4:58 pm
Posts: 21565
Full Member
 

unlucky iDave. Been picking up dog poo for about fifteen years and never ripped a nappy sack. Did one have the bottom of a dog poo bag split though. I found out because I happened to be swinging the bag around at the time!!!!

What technique do you use?
I turn the bag inside out over my hand (so I would see any obvious bag fails) then lift by hand and turn the bag back over the poo. I found poop scoops tended to rip the bag so stopped using them very quickly.


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 5:00 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Get the real deal dog poo bag from your council, 1p each where we are, no rips, built for the horrid jobbie.


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 5:11 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I find the whole concept of wrapping up a biodegradable material in something that isn't biodegradable quite preposterous, really. Why don't people just train their dogs to poo in some undergrowth, or off the path? Or take a little shovel thing so's you can scoop it into the bushes or whatever?

Or use dog nappies?


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 5:16 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

was using the normally rock solid inside out bag method and just misjudged edge of bag lifting a combo-poo

no finger food for me this week


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 5:17 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

elf, 99% of my pooches poos are off-piste

about once a week he gets it wrong...


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 5:20 pm
Posts: 30656
Free Member
 

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 5:21 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Just have a flicking stick handy then. 🙂


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 5:21 pm
Posts: 21565
Full Member
 

My nappy sacks are biodegradable.


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 5:27 pm
Posts: 30656
Free Member
 

My nappy sacks are biodegradable.

As is Elfinsafety's argument, as it will disintegrate shortly 😉


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 5:30 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

decent flicking sticks are hard to come by... they don't grow on trees you know


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 5:33 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Yeah, but how many people use nappy sacks? Most folk I see just use regular carrier baygs. I seen a woman earlier using a Waitrose bayg.

Ha! So there! How about that one? You weren't expecting that one were you??


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 5:35 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Just leave it, it's the latest craze isn't it? 🙄


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 5:37 pm
Posts: 22
Free Member
 

Top marks for picking it up, I detest dog owners who let their mutt foul and not pick it up, especially in the park where it's full of kids


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 6:05 pm
Posts: 479
Full Member
 

Elfinsafety - Member

Yeah, but how many people use nappy sacks? Most folk I see just use regular carrier baygs. I seen a woman earlier using a Waitrose bayg.

Ha! So there! How about that one? You weren't expecting that one were you??


i use waitrose nappy sacks. edit add and they are bio degradable


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 6:07 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

😐


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 6:08 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I mostly succeed in not thinking about what we as a society are putting into landfill - thanks ever so much for breaking the illusion.

Our great-grandchildren will be clearing up that particular mess, and wondering what on earth we thought we were doing.

EDIT: STW seems much faster now.


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 6:09 pm
Posts: 3774
Free Member
 

nevr had a (Tesco Value)nappy bag split using one of these scoops - http://www.petsathome.com/shop/pedigree-easi-scoop-poop-scoop-26260?cm_mmc=Google%20Base-_-%20Products-_-%20Products%20-_-Products

and even if it did, wash the scoop as your fingers wouldnt be in contact anyway


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 6:10 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I detest dog owners who let their mutt foul and not pick it up, especially in the park where it's full of kids

Is it ok to leave it on a mountain side that is otherwise occupied by cows?

iDave, the hard lessons are the ones that you'll remember. 😉


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 6:20 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Is it ok to leave it on a mountain side that is otherwise occupied by cows?

No. You're altering the balance of the environment.


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 6:25 pm
Posts: 8602
Free Member
 

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 6:28 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

😥


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 6:28 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

No. You're altering the balance of the environment.

Do what? 😕

I don't get that at all.

I am a bit fick dow.


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 6:33 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I think he means my dog is so AWESOME that one little poo can alter the balance of the whole environment. 💡


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 6:40 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I fail to see why dog poo is any worse than

fox poo
cat poo
cow poo
sheep poo
horse poo
man/woman poo
when deposited out in the countryside off piste .

I would rather see poo in the sticks than the Mac D`s wrappers all over


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 6:49 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

If one dog leaves one dog poo then no-one will ever notice.

But if you have an area like Snowdonia, which is visited by several million people each year, then it's a different story.

It's a fragile upland environment, with rare plants, animals, and even fungae and bacteria. Upset that balance with a few million doggie dooes each year and now you're looking at significant damage to the biodiversity that everyone goes to visit in the first place.

Same is also true of human faeces.

And that's before you start worrying about what happens when it gets washed into streams that people and animals further down the mountainside might be drinking from.


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 7:25 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

And that's before you start worrying about what happens when it gets washed into streams that people and animals further down the mountainside might be drinking from.

That's very true, on a school trip we were doing The Pennine Way. We were told of this very danger that drinking from streams could be dangerous as we didn't know what was further upstream. Some folks did drink from a stream and further up we saw a dead sheep in the stream. 😯
No one died or even got ill.


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 7:36 pm
Posts: 54
Free Member
 

Was walking our young pup over the nearby Ashdown forest - he's still learning so had done his business on th bridleway, was just bagging it up when a lady walking three dogs passed and asked why I was bothering. She didn't.

She's one of the reasons we can't take our two girls fo walks up there without them treading repeatedly in doggie eggs that owners can't be bothered to clear up. Fair boils my piddle.


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 8:24 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

But if you have an area like Snowdonia, which is visited by several million people each year, then it's a different story.

It's a fragile upland environment, with rare plants, animals, and even fungae and bacteria. Upset that balance with a few million doggie dooes each year and now you're looking at significant damage to the biodiversity that everyone goes to visit in the first place.

So, all those walking boots don't cause any erosion then? And I spose the pollution from all those millions of cars that go there every year doesn't cause any damage at all? Right, ok...

Pfft. People happily live lives which ultimately cause untold destruction to the planet, yet get worried about a bit of poo? Dear oh dear oh dear... 🙄


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 8:30 pm
Posts: 54
Free Member
 

Well, if you're ok with it you're welcome to come round and wipe down a toddler covered with fidos finest next time we go for a walk over the forest. Different if they're doing it metres from the bridleway but just leaving it elsewhere is just lazy (and dangerous t little ones)


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 8:42 pm
Posts: 22
Free Member
 

Elfinsafety - maybe when you kids to worry about you'll have more concern. A lad at our school lost his sight in one eye through dog muck contact as a toddler


 
Posted : 09/01/2011 10:33 pm
Posts: 22
Free Member
 

The other thing I don't get is when people go to the trouble of picking up after their dog and then leave the deposit hanging from a tree branch or fencepost. What's that about?


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 7:41 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

M6TTF + 1 A kid had the same thing happen at my High School, face plant on the Rugby field into the stuff, not very nice as he was really sick for ages before they took the eye out and i always remembered that with my kids, applaud folk who clear the stuff up, very responsible, in France they dont seem to bother we are allways sidestepping the stuff, gopping on the streets and not acceptable.

People such as woffle describe are not very pleasant, how would they like if they stood in my Richard the Thirds while out walking.


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 7:52 am
Posts: 97
Free Member
 

Why not just train your dog to eat it straight afterwards, most labradors do.

They are very Eco friendly creatures.


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 8:22 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

YES BAG, IT TAKE AWAY.

Had a local walk totally marred other day as really obvious that locals just let the dog rip beyond stile as most of poo's within first 50 100 yrds worse to as narrow path ,and to add to it sign at either end of path stateing no dog fowling .

I'm a dog owner too and mine do all there giants[bernese mtn dogs so big doos]at home and will hold em till their home , but also carry bags incase of acccidents.

I work with a client whose mother was unfortunate with dog doo,s and believe me you don't want to mess with them.!!!!!

Cleanup guys.


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 8:51 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

After the snow round here had melted it wasn't nice. Loads of people had obviously left the poo because the snow hid it. So when it all melted there was shiv all over the place. Making the walk to the station rather trecherous! I must have trodden in at least 3 dog eggs due to the combination of the amount and low street lighting early in the mornings 🙁


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 8:57 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I must have trodden in at least 3 dog eggs due to the combination of the amount and low street lighting early in the mornings

Have you ever considered looking where you're going? I can't remember when I last had a shoe, turd interface! 😉


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 9:30 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

has anyone successfully bred a cyclical canine centipede yet? I see a gap in the market here!


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 9:48 am
Posts: 6984
Free Member
 

so people bag it and take it home, then what?
and the people who just let their dogs go at home, how do they deal with that, do they just have gardens piling up with shit?


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 9:48 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

some tosser near my sons school lets, in fact encourages, his shaffy shit everywhere. the same poo is all over the pavement, entrance to field. i am on a mission, i'll find out where he lives and it's going back through his letterbox.


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 10:14 am
Posts: 97
Free Member
 

iDave - Member

some tosser near my sons school lets, in fact encourages, his shaffy shit everywhere. the same poo is all over the pavement, entrance to field. i am on a mission, i'll find out where he lives and it's going back through his letterbox.

Freeze it 1st then post it though..... much easier and more fun


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 10:20 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Damn those staffies. 😈

I always thought that wrapping the offending article in paper, setting fire to the paper and then ringing the doorbell was the solution to this type of problem.


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 10:22 am
Posts: 31062
Free Member
 

It's not the staffies, but we all know the type of people that own them... 🙂


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 10:42 am
Posts: 17371
Full Member
 

There's too much faff with this picking up dog poo problem. Dog ownership should be about more than picking up hot steaming turds.

The answer is simple. Encourage mtb riders to use the dog pooed area and their tyres will pick it up and spread it neatly in stripes up the back of the rider (using mudguards is cheating).

End of problem.


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 10:45 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

It's not the staffies, but we all know the type of people that own them...

Tattooed boneheads, cull the lot of them, I say.


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 12:07 pm
Posts: 31062
Free Member
 

Most of 'em anyway 😉


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 12:10 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

Nowt wrong with off piste poo! It is usually gone in 3 days!

The worst thing is head height bags filled with dog eggs! Nasty 😥


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 12:21 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

It's not the staffies, but we all know the type of people that own them...

Tattooed boneheads, cull the lot of them, I say

What a couple of dicks.


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 12:45 pm
Posts: 2006
Free Member
 

I'd go for a byelaw that allows you to throw the dog egg at the dog owner/ car/ property if he fails to pick it up

Nowt wrong with off piste poo! It is usually gone in 3 days!

not really which is why it's such a problem


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 1:10 pm
Posts: 31062
Free Member
 

What a couple of dicks.

Oooh get you sweetheart. I fear you missed out on a private joke there love. don simon does indeed own a beautiful staffie, and I own a wee terrier. It is traditional for us to take the pish out of each other's dogs. But don't let that stop you jumping to conclusions and chucking personal insults around.


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 3:24 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

and the people who just let their dogs go at home, how do they deal with that, do they just have gardens piling up with shit?

We compost ours with veg peelings n tea bags , n other garden waste,
Recycled POO.!!!!


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 4:08 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

It is traditional for us to take the pish

OK, right, we're taking the pish then, are we? Erm..... 8)


 
Posted : 10/01/2011 7:06 pm